Marker is located on the Southwest Corner of North Martin Luther King, Jr. Boulevard and Arctic Avenue.

Historical Marker text:

1889-1953A Virginia entrepreneur who headed north in 1911 opened an Arctic Avenue beauty salon in Atlantic City. She expanded by teaching beauty culture door-to-door with products of the day, some self-styled. Madame Washington, as she would later be called, patented a hair curl-remover and later incorporated as Apex Beauty Products. That company would eventually manufacture more than 70 products sold by some 45,000 Apex agents nationwide. Her Apex School of Scientific Beauty Culture became established in 12 US cities, as well as in the Caribbean and South Africa, training some 4,000 people annually. At the New York World's Fair in 1939 she was named one of the world's top-ten businesswomen. Madame Washington became one of this country's first female African-American millionaires and in 1997 was inducted into the Atlantic City Women's Hall of Fame. She also founded the Northside Easter Parade and was on the Northside Board of Trade.

Additional Information:

"Madame Washington" as she was widely known, was a millionaire black businesswoman and founded the Apex News & Hair Company. She was born June 6, 1889 in Beckley, Virginia and died March 23, 1953 in Atlantic City. Washington attended Norfolk Mission College, and later studied at both Columbia University and Northwestern College. Her first job was as a dressmaker, but her mother's health led her to seek out Atlantic City as a new home - in the early 20th century, the ocean air was publicized as being very beneficial to the sick.

In 1913 she started a hairdressing business in Atlantic City, and later expanded the business, teaching students and developing beauty products. After an employee referred to Washington as "Madame" out of respect, she adopted the title in her professional career. In 1920, noting the lack of beauty products for African Americans, she founded the Apex News & Hair Company. Apex maintained a lab and school in Atlantic City, as well as an office in New York City. Eventually her beauty colleges were located in twelve states and there were 35,000 agents all over the world. After Washington's death, her daughter, Joan Cross Washington, led the company until it was sold.

Madame Washington has been called one of the most important business executives in the black community. She was honored at the 1939 New York World's Fair as one of the "Most Distinguished Businesswomen". She was also an active member of the Atlantic City Board of Trade.

She was also dedicated to her local community. Madame Washington founded a nursing home - Apex Rest - for the elderly in Atlantic City, and, after encountering discrimination at the local golf course, she established her own for people of all races to enjoy a round of golf. Many also told stories of Washington either buying carloads of coal and leaving them out on the streets for the needy to take, or flying planes over the city which dropped coupons for coal. During the Great Depression, access to this resource was invaluable for surviving, especially in the winter months.

Although she suffered a stroke in 1947 which left her paralyzed, Madame Washington continued to provide for Atlantic City's black community, founding an African-American Easter Parade after her efforts to dress two local girls from the Northside in beautiful dress still found them ignored by white judges at the Boardwalk parade. Even as a millionaire, Madame Washington never turned her back on her community.